Elmer Dustin's story is both fascinating and
commonplace. Prisons are filled with men like him who are able to
manipulate those around them with ease and without conscience.
Dustin was perhaps more proficient than most, as he clearly had
no trouble cleverly exploiting his girlfriend, the prison staff,
his fellow townsfolk, and, eventually, the Governor of Iowa
himself.

From the March 18, 1897 Anamosa Journal

UNCEREMONIOUSLY DEPARTED

Convict Leaves Without Notice

E.S. Dustin, a convict sentenced from
Cherokee County for cattle stealing, made an unheralded exit last
Thursday night.Dustin has recently recovered from a siege
of typhoid fever and had not yet been set at hard labor.For
some weeks past he had been retained in the hospital as cook and
in addition to this service attended to the milking.In
performing the latter duty he was accorded the privilege of
remaining in the yard until after the gun guards were off the
walls.Last Thursday night Jim Williams, the prison
roundsman, made his appearance at the hospital ward at 8 oclock
as usual.A report was sent out by Sam Lorimer in the
hospital that Dustin had failed to show up.The officials
were notified and a search of the premises was made but failed to
reveal the missing man.No clue as to the method of exit
has been gained.The night in question, it will be
remembered, was foggy followed later in the evening by a
disagreeable, chilly rain.Dustin had evidently scaled the
walls early in the evening.All signs point to the
conclusion that he had an appointment and that Thursday night was
the time agreed on.The prisoner had the same opportunity
every night to make his departure for weeks past  many of
the evenings being congenial.To a man not in possession of
perfect health and still with the germs of typhoid fever
lingering in his system, the risk of exposure to the inclemencies
of last Thursday night, were he unaided, would have deterred him
making an attempt to gain his liberty.It is said Dustin
has friends and relatives in the vicinity.Under Warden
Barr he was a trustie and accorded all the privileges which fall
to the lot of a well-behaved convict who is nearing the close of
his term.

Dustin is no common cattle thief.His
depredations represent wholesale confiscations.A single
steer offered no inducement to the man.He would spot a
bunch of cattle turned out to grass  a bunch which the
owner would not visit oftener than once a week  and drive
off the whole herd, landing them at the nearest railway station,
ship to the Chicago market, and accompany his plunder to its
destination.Three times he had paid the penalty for this
high-handed thieving and done time in Anamosa.He is clever
in his work and where he has encountered the law on one occasion
he alone knows how many times his ventures have met with success.At the present writing no trace of the missing man has been
discovered.It was Dustin who conducted the stone work on
the new stand pipe.As a mason he is unexcelled.

From the December 22, 1898 Anamosa
Journal

CONVICT DUSTIN
CAUGHT

Escaped from the Penitentiary
a Year Ago and has Been at Liberty Until a Few Days Ago

Recognized and Recaptured by Ex-Deputy
Warden Passwater at Cordon, Iowa.

Something over a year ago, Elmer
Dustin, a convict at the Anamosa Penitentiary, made his escape
from within the confines of that institution, and notwithstanding
the energetic and persistent efforts of the warden and his
assistants, continued throughout the balance of the Madden
administration, not the slightest clue to his whereabouts could
be ascertained.The state was flooded with cards bearing
his description and photograph and a liberal reward offered for
his apprehension, but in vain.There was always a mystery
connected with the manner in which Dustin made his exit from
penitentiary environments.

For a period of several weeks immediately
preceding his disappearance he had been sick in the hospital with
typhoid fever and during convalescence was allowed to pass from
the hospital yard to the main prison enclosure for the purpose of
bringing milk from the stables to the hospital kitchen.The
days were short and milking was done by a trusty
after the evening lockup and after the guards had been relieved
from duty on the walls.On the day of Dustins escape
Warden Madden had issued an order curtailing the prisoners
special privileges and it is evident the order reached the ears
of the prisoner, as he failed to return from the stables that
evening at the customary hour, and the most diligent search
immediately instituted failed to discover his whereabouts.Later
his convict clothing was found near the Milwaukee bridge over the
Buffalo and with this discovery every semblance of a clue failed
to materialize.

Recently ex-deputy warden Passwater of
Indianola, now deputy sheriff of Warren County, was called to
Corydon on business connected with his office.Sauntering
leisurely down the principal thoroughfare of that bustling little
city, he came face to face with Dustin.Recognition was
mutual and when informed that he could consider himself under
arrest Dustin did not make violent resistance, although for a
time he vehemently maintained it a case of mistaken identity and
declared he never had so much as seen the Anamosa penitentiary
from an exterior point of view.The bluff did not work,
however, and Passwater conducted his prisoner to the Corydon city
jail.

The news of Dustins arrest spread
rapidly throughout the town.He had conducted himself
during his sojourn in Corydon in an exemplary manner, had just
been initiated into the ranks of Knighthood in the K. of P. lodge
of the city, and was so well thought of by his employer that only
a few weeks previous he had been promoted from a position as
common laborer to foreman of a large stock ranch.Then too,
he had but recently married into their midst.The
indignation of Corydon citizens was great at what they honestly
believed an outrage upon one of their most respected number.Mr. Passwater was threatened with violence at their hands, and it
was proposed to relieve him of his prisoner by force.Cooler
counsel prevailed however, and when after thorough investigation
there was no longer reason to doubt Dustins past history,
the indignation was greatly augmented, but this time the prisoner
was the object of their wrath.

In due time Mr. Dustin received a call
at the jail from his wife and this visitor was a revelation to
Mr. Passwater.In her he recognized Mrs. Telles, a former
respected lady resident of Anamosa, and for a brief time an
employee of the female ward of the prison.It was while
acting in that capacity no doubt that the woman first made Dustins
acquaintance, and there are some who entertain suspicious that it
was through this acquaintance that Dustin was able to make his
escape so easily and leave no trace of himself to aid the
officers in their search for him.

Dustin has a prison record.The
term he is now completing is the third to his credit, or
discredit, at the Anamosa institution.His offense each
time has been the same  cattle stealing.He is no
ordinary petty bovine purloiner, however.His operations
were always conducted on a large scale and no less than a carload
of fat beeves would tempt his avarice.A full train load,
stolen from the pasture of his own uncle, driven to an obscure
little railway station, shipped to Chicago and the money
therefrom safely planted in his trouser pockets, is one of the
feats to his credit.His present sentence of five years,
one third of which has been served, is the penalty for a like
offense committed in Cherokee County, with the difference that
only two carloads of butchers stock, instead of a full
train load, figured in the financial end of the deal.

As a convict Dustin was considered a
model.Under Warden Barr he was a trusty and
for several months drove the prison farm team.He was a
mason and bricklayer of more than usual ability and as such
frequently held the position of foreman of gangs performing this
class of labor.His industry and intelligence secured for
him special privileges at the hand of every warden under whom he
served time.

Mr. Passwater arrived in Anamosa with
his prisoner last Friday morning.No. 2780 was immediately
revived on the prison records and given an opportunity to make up
for time lost to the state by the manipulation of a set of tools
among the prison stone cutters.

From the December 28, 1899 Anamosa
Journal

ELMER DUSTIN PARDONED

He Who Escaped and Was Brought Back
Year Ago Gets Executive Clemency  A Xmas Gift

Elmer Dustin, the convict who escaped
from the Anamosa penitentiary and was recaptured a year ago, has
been pardoned.The pardon, or more properly the order to
release the man, was telegraphed from Des Moines last Saturday.It could not have reached Anamosa by mail and, as the pardon was
in the nature of a Christmas gift, the governor was prevailed
upon to use the wire.Dustin departed from Anamosa on the
7:40 train last Saturday night.

Unquestionably the good record which
Dustin made at Corydon militated in his favor.His wife
worked faithfully for his pardon and her efforts were successful.Dustin was doing a five year sentence and had about a year yet to
serve.